The most stable isotopes of nitrogen are 14N and 15N.
N-14 and N-15 are both stable.
Nitrogen isotopes do not have a charge.Ions have a charge.
Nitrogen has three stable isotopes. Namely they are nitrogen-14, nitrogen-15 and nitrogen-16.
Among nitrogen isotopes, only nitrogen-14 and nitrogen-15 are stable against radioactive decay.
Nitrogen has two stable isotopes: N-14 and N-15 and 14 radioactive isotopes.
Isotopes of Nitrogen gay but
No, they are isotopes with the same atomic mass. But they are isotopes of different elements and so are very different from on another. For example nitrogen-16 and nitrogen-14 are isotopes of the same element.
These isotopes have a different number of neutrons.
The natural isotopes of nitrogen are stable; for the synthetic radioactive isotopes of nirogen see the link below.
Nitrogen has 3 isotopes. All of them have 7 protons. (That's why they're nitrogen.) Let's look at the isotopes. 13N - Nitrogen with 6 neutrons 14N - Nitrogen with 7 neutrons 15N - Nitrogen with 8 neutrons The first isotope is a synthetic one. It must be made through a nuclear process. The other two are naturally occurring isotopes. A link is provided to Wikipedia, which was the source for this information. Surf on over to mine other details.
Nitrogen atoms, of course. Naturally occurring nitrogen has two isotopes: nitrogen-14 and nitrogen-15.
n14 + n15
2